Typophile - Comments for "Dealing with an uppercase font with calt features"http://typophile.com/node/104928
Comments for "Dealing with an uppercase font with calt features"enI went ahead a tried thishttp://typophile.com/node/104928#comment-561372
<p>I went ahead a tried this out, and so far it's working beautifully! Thank you for your help! I found a few comments you left on other threads that were also very useful. For other folks that might be interested, the other thread can be <a class="freelinking external" href="http://typophile.com/node/91386" rel="nofollow"> found here.</a></p>
Mon, 29 Jul 2013 05:00:01 +0000Heather Dianecomment 561372 at http://typophile.comI don't know of any problemshttp://typophile.com/node/104928#comment-561348
<p>I don't know of any problems aside from the first caveat that John Hudson mentioned in that thread.</p>
<p>There's no blank lowercase when using the font, because whatever has been typed or pasted gets directed via the unicode to the capital letters. That's all prior to any OpenType stuff happening.</p>
Sun, 28 Jul 2013 17:33:42 +0000eliasoncomment 561348 at http://typophile.comThank you for the suggestion.http://typophile.com/node/104928#comment-561347
<p>Thank you for the suggestion. I read through the post you referenced, I'm assuming Double encoding worked for you? There seemed to be some question if that would create problems. Also, would this work only if the user has checked the opentype options? For instance, if they're using it in indesign and haven't checked on the opentype features, would the lowercase just be blank?<br />
Cheers!</p>
Sun, 28 Jul 2013 16:43:38 +0000Heather Dianecomment 561347 at http://typophile.comDouble encoding is onehttp://typophile.com/node/104928#comment-561075
<p><a class="freelinking external" href="http://typophile.com/node/67092" rel="nofollow">Double encoding is one possibility</a>.</p>
Thu, 25 Jul 2013 01:01:08 +0000eliasoncomment 561075 at http://typophile.com